Gut bacteria respond quickest to sudden changes of optimum size in surrounding environment
Probing into the manner in which gut bacteria respond to sudden change in surrounding environment, scientists have found that extreme values of response is reached quickest at optimum size of changes and spotted intriguing ‘temporary adaptation’ for a brief moment long before the E.coli cells attain matching actual adaptation.
Altered gut ecosystems plus the microbiota's potential for rapid evolution: A recipe for inevitable change with unknown consequences - ScienceDirect
Frontiers Gut Microbiota and Their Role in Health and Metabolic Disease of Dairy Cow
Environmental factors shaping the gut microbiome in a Dutch population
Social motility of biofilm-like microcolonies in a gliding bacterium
PDF) Do an Altered Gut Microbiota and an Associated Leaky Gut Affect COVID-19 Severity?
Frontiers Skin-to-blood pH shift triggers metabolome and proteome global remodelling in Staphylococcus epidermidis
Temperatures beyond the community optimum promote the dominance of heat-adapted, fast growing and stress resistant bacteria in alpine soils - ScienceDirect
Live from under the lens: exploring microbial motility with dynamic imaging and microfluidics
Re-examining chemically defined liquid diets through the lens of the microbiome